M
Mohammad Bahram
Researcher at Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Publications - 113
Citations - 14325
Mohammad Bahram is an academic researcher from Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Biology. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 94 publications receiving 9865 citations. Previous affiliations of Mohammad Bahram include University of Tartu & Uppsala University.
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Host genetic variation strongly influences the microbiome structure and function in fungal fruiting-bodies.
Mari Pent,Markus Hiltunen,Kadri Põldmaa,Brendan R. Furneaux,Falk Hildebrand,Hanna Johannesson,Martin Ryberg,Mohammad Bahram +7 more
TL;DR: The authors' analyses revealed that fine genetic variations between host fungi could strongly affect their associated microbiome, explaining, respectively, 25% and 37% of the variation in microbiome structure and function, whereas geographic distance and soil pH remained of secondary importance.
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Host tree organ is the primary driver of endophytic fungal community structure in a hemiboreal forest
TL;DR: High-throughput sequencing revealed that tree organ is the main determinant of the structure of fungal communities, while the effects of host species and locality remained secondary and negligible, respectively.
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Bacterial community dynamics across developmental stages of fungal fruiting bodies.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that bacterial community structure differs between internal and external parts of the fruiting body but not between inner tissues, and certain functional groups persist in fruiting bodies during the maturation, but are replaced by putative parasites/pathogens afterwards.
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Specificity of fungal associations of Pyroleae and Monotropa hypopitys during germination and seedling development.
Veronika A. Johansson,Mohammad Bahram,Mohammad Bahram,Leho Tedersoo,Urmas Kõljalg,Ove Eriksson +5 more
TL;DR: Investigation of germination and seedling development and the diversity of fungi associated with germinating seeds and subterranean seedlings in five Monotropoideae species suggests variation in specificity of associated fungi during seedling ontogeny in mycoheterotrophs represents ongoing evolution along a parasitism–mutualism continuum.
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Host diversity and trophic status as determinants of species richness and community composition of fungus gnats
TL;DR: Empirical evidence suggests oligophages with host preference to prevail among mushroom-feeding fungus gnats, thereby distinguishing these from many other studied insect guilds, largely composed of broad generalists and strict specialists.